Law School launches new program

Client counseling1L Brad Smith, at left, practices his counseling skills with Rachel Provencher '13 in the role of his client. Adjunct Professor of Law Andrew Fox, at right, provides feedback on the simulation.
Photo by Gretchen Bedell

Legal Practice Program provides students with practice-ready skills.

The program, which began in the fall of 2012, introduces students to the most important lawyering skills
over the course of their first two years of legal study and will ensure
that William & Mary Law graduates are ready for practice when they
enter the profession.

Legal Practice builds on the foundation of Legal Skills, William
& Mary's former practical skills program. It has retained some of
the same basic structure - dividing students into small "law firms"
taught, in part, by adjunct professors - but the curriculum is much
different.

"We retained the best aspects from the old Legal Skills program,
including the emphasis on professional responsibility and practical
simulations, while adding significantly more writing instruction," said
Professor Meredith B. Aden, director of the Legal Practice Program. "Definitely, writing is the heaviest emphasis."

New first-year students are divided into one of 15 1L firms, which
are taught by both adjunct professors who are practicing attorneys and
full-time writing professors. Each firm has approximately 12 to 14
students.

"What's unique about us compared with other law schools is that we
have writing professors as well as adjunct professors who teach
non-writing skills (including client interviewing, client counseling,
and negotiation)," Aden said. "And each firm also has a student writing
and practice fellow who helps the writing professor and the adjunct
professor with writing instruction and practical simulations."

The program also includes an increased emphasis on research
instruction during the first year, and each firm has a reference
librarian. The Advanced Research course curriculum has been
incorporated into the 1L classes, and the librarians provide in-depth
instruction on crucial legal research skills to all first-year students.

First-year students earn three credits each semester for Legal
Practice. The curriculum focuses on objective memorandum writing and
basic client and research skills during the fall semester and research
and persuasive written and oral advocacy during the spring semester.

The new program also includes significant changes for second-year law
students. In the spring, second-year students take an additional two-credit Legal Practice class, but in the new program, they can choose
from a menu of courses, including Appellate Advocacy, Pretrial Criminal,
and Pretrial Civil. The classes are all taught by adjunct professors
who are practitioners in the specific subject area in which they teach.
Many are long-time adjunct professors from the prior Legal Skills
program. These options enable students to select the course that best
reflects their interests and career goals. Aden anticipates that this
menu of courses will be expanded in the future.

In addition, students must take a two-credit Professional
Responsibility course during their second or third year, Aden said. The
Professional Responsibility course is a traditional, casebook-based
class. This increased professional responsibility instruction
complements the emphasis on professionalism and ethics in the first year
Legal Practice curriculum.

Both years of the new Legal Practice program are graded on a
traditional letter-grade system - a change from the Legal Skills
Program's pass/fail system. Aden believes this is beneficial for
students.

"Writing is the most important skill you have as a lawyer, and it is
very important to hone this skill," she said. "Having [Legal Practice]
as a graded course places the proper emphasis on the class."

Jordan Evans, a third-year student with experience in both Legal
Skills and Legal Practice, has been impressed with the new program.

"Legal Practice is an improvement on what was a very innovative and substantively unique Legal Skills program," he said.

Evans, who currently serves as a writing and practice fellow for
Legal Practice, said the program will help students compete in the job
market, as they will have a more solid foundation in critical practical
skills.

"The new program places a greater emphasis on writing, which makes
sense considering how important writing skills are in the workplace," he
said. "In your first year of law school, Legal Practice is likely the
only way to gain these practical skills. Students at other schools are
not always afforded these same experiences so early in law school."

New students enrolled in Legal Practice's inaugural semester gave the
program high marks. They shared their thoughts about the program
following William & Mary's introductory Law Week.

"The small firm groups were very helpful, especially our [teaching assistant]. He
provided some great insight on how to better prepare for classes and
balance school and personal life," one student said.

"I liked getting a chance to socialize with [the students in] our
[Legal Practice] firms and with the rest of the law school before
classes begin," another student said. "I also really liked meeting
everyone I'll be working with for the Legal Practice program, and I am
very happy with our adjunct and writing professors."

"My writing fellow, Tricia, went above and beyond to be a helpful
resource and mentor to my entire class," said a third student. "I cannot
say enough positive things about her. She did a truly wonderful job."

Before joining the faculty at William & Mary Law School, Aden
served as the director of Legal Writing at Mississippi College School of
Law, where she designed and implemented a Legal Writing program. She
received her B.A. in economics from the University of Alabama and her
J.D. from the University of Virginia School of Law. She also earned her
LL.M. in litigation and dispute resolution from The George Washington
University Law School.